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Old 05-05-2024, 06:43 PM   #1
TMC
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Default What Happened to the California Golden Seals?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8S49YozdBQ

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In this All Sports History video, we'll take a look back to late 1960's NHL. When in 1967 the California Golden Seals story began when they were included as part of a legendary expansion to the National Hockey League, placing NHL teams on the west coast for the first time. So why after nine seasons did the Seals leave the San Francisco Bay Area and move to Cleveland? In today’s video we’ll take a look back at how financial turmoil and failed relocation attempts doomed the Seals almost from the very beginning.

This "California Golden Seals Documentary" Includes

In their final season in the WHL, the Seals moved from the aging Cow Palace arena to the brand new Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena (known today as Oakland Arena). Due to the team now playing in Oakland, Van Gerbig decided to rename the team the “California Seals” to try and widen the team’s appeal throughout the bay area and state. However, in a way, the team rebrand backfired. The Seals first season in the NHL was disastrous on the ice. And making matters worse, people who lived across the bay in San Francisco had little interest in commuting to the East Bay to attend Seals games. A frustrated Van Gerbig decided to drop the name California, and simply call the team the “Oakland Seals” instead. Van Gerbig on many different occasions also threatened to move the team to another city, if the Seal’s fortunes didn’t turn around. Bert Olmstead, the Oakland Seals hockey head coach and general manger publicly backed the idea of the team moving to Vancouver, while an ownership group from western New York offered to buy the Oakland Golden Seals and move them to Buffalo. However, the NHL blocked the team's efforts to relocate.

By the club's third season Van Gerbig was looking to offload to a new ownership group, and briefly sold the Seals to a group financially backed by football announcer Pat Summerall among others. But, the deal fell apart when the Summerall backed company known as Trans-National Communications failed to pay ownership installments for the Seals. Van Gerbig then took control of the team back, and later sold the franchise to the Oakland A’s owner Charlie O Finley, setting up the second chapter to the Seals time in the Bay Area. Charlie Finley Oakland A's ownership made him Known for his eccentric behavior, and he immediately set out to put his stamp on the Seals franchise. Finley decided to change the team’s name to the “Bay Area Seals” for the 1970-71 season, but ended up changing the name again just two games into the season, to the “California Golden Seals”.

In one of the most lopsided trades in NHL history, the Seals traded away their first round draft pick for the 1971 draft to the Montreal Canadiens for a first round pick in the 1970 draft. Because of how bad the Seals played in 1970, the Canadiens were able to select future hall of fame player Guy Lafleur with the first pick in the draft. During the summer of 1975, a new ownership group headed by San Francisco hotel magnate Mel Swig swooped in and bought the Seals with the intention of keeping the team in the bay area. Swig wanted the team to move into a proposed new arena in San Francisco. Unfortunately, plans for the new arena fell through after the election for mayor of San Francisco in November of that year. With no new prospects of a future arena getting built anytime soon, an exasperated NHL at this point threw their hands up and essentially greenlit owner Swig the option to relocate out of the Bay Area.

The Seals minority owners, George and Gordon Gund convinced Swig to move the team to their hometown in Cleveland, Ohio. That summer the NHL formally approved of the Seals relocation to Cleveland, where they would rebrand as the “Cleveland Barons”. With the approval, and move done so hastily, the club had little time to set up a marketing campaign in Cleveland to announce their presence. After yet another last place finish, and Melvin Swigs inability to cover in basic necessities like the team’s payroll, he decided to sell his ownership stake to the Gund Brothers for $5.3 million. the Gund Brothers pitched the idea of merging the Barons with the equally struggling Minnesota North Stars franchise, which the NHL reluctantly went along with.

Throughout their brief existence, the California Golden Seals left an indelible mark on the NHL. In 2022, as part of Adidas’ Reverse Retro jersey series, the San Jose Sharks even honored Bay Area hockey history with a California Golden Seals NHL 22 inspired design. Today, the California Golden Seals remain a nostalgic reminder of a bygone era in hockey, serving as a testament to the enduring passion and enduring allure of the sport.

So what did you guys think about the Golden Seals moving to Cleveland and becoming the Barons, and then eventually being folded into the Minnesota North Stars? And should the San Jose Sharks do more to honor the old California Golden Seals teams?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ObLMqg0Y9h4

Quote:
I scratch the surface on the history of the first NHL team to ever have "Golden" in their name, the California Golden Seals.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Wi_XfknSb4

Quote:
They never had a winning season and never made money. Moving didn't help, so the NHL merged them with the North Stars.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1WHIfARrpys

Quote:
Hope you liked the creative title. What better way to talk about a team that had more rebrands than playoff appearances. The San Francisco/California/Oakland/Bay Area Seals/California Golden Seals/Cleveland Barons were that team.

You wouldn’t expect the San Jose Sharks and Columbus Blue Jackets to have much in common considering one is on the West Coast and the other is in the Eastern Midwest. Yet the Seals/Barons are the reason why both teams exist, in a weird way.
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Old 09-16-2025, 07:07 PM   #2
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fyfu8Lx66WI

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The Story of the California Golden Seals Part 1 | NHL Franchise History

In this video, we begin our deep dive into one of the biggest flops of NHL expansion history, the California Golden Seals. As one of the NHL’s expansion teams of 1967, the Golden Seals were created as one of two teams to bring professional hockey to California, but their story quickly became one filled with low attendance, poor on ice performance, ownership issues, and constant rebranding. In this video, I will explain how the Golden Seals came into the league, their early struggles, questionable trades, ownership problems, and what ultimately lead to the team relocating by the mid-1970s. All of this would make the Seals franchise one of the most unique case studies of NHL history. Like and subscribe for more!

Time Stamps:
  • 0:00 Introduction
  • 1:34 The Creation Story
  • 3:18 1967 Expansion Draft
  • 4:53 Early Relocation Concerns
  • 6:00 Playoff Failures
  • 6:52 Charlie Finley Era
  • 10:24 Struggle for a New Owner
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J5q4U_CFQBQ

Quote:
The Story of the California Golden Seals Part 2 | NHL History & Forgotten Franchise

In Part 2 of our deep dive into the California Golden Seals, we continue exploring the history of the California Golden Seals, including the team's history after leaving California. After a rocky start filled with ownership changes, low attendance, and branding experiments, the Golden Seals entered a period of chaos that resulted in a slow decline that ultimately sealed the team's fate. The franchise relocated to Cleveland, Ohio, becoming the Cleveland Barons, but the franchise was even worse following the move. In this video, I will explain the short existence of the Cleveland Barons and what resulted in the team's merger with the Minnesota North Stars by the end of the 1970s.
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Old 05-02-2026, 04:11 AM   #3
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aT2NQjg6E1Y

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The California Golden Seals: A Legacy of Zero Hope

The NHL expanded in 1967 with the promise of bringing professional hockey to the masses, but what followed was a nine-year descent into chaos, bankruptcy, and white skates.

In this deep dive, we explore the bizarre and tragic history of the California Golden Seals. From their successful roots at the Cow Palace to the flamboyant ownership of Charlie Finley and the trade that accidentally handed a dynasty to the Montreal Canadiens, this is the story of a franchise that struggled to find its identity before vanishing into the ghost of the Cleveland Barons.

We look at the "names on jerseys" trend, and the incredible irony of the San Jose Sharks eventually returning to the very arena the NHL originally rejected.

Timestamps:
  • 0:00 Intro
  • 1:10 Trouble Across The Bridge
  • 2:23 Lawsuit Over Blocked Sales
  • 4:35 Thank You All For The Love And Support
  • 5:25 Charlie Finley Era
  • 7:42 Departure To Cleveland And Merger
  • 8:45 Birth Of My San Jose Sharks/Outro
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Old 05-02-2026, 10:15 AM   #4
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Loved those uniforms the Seals wore during 1974-76 with the teal, yellow, and white color scheme. Best uniforms in the NHL at that time. The 1975-76 team was showing noticeable signs of improvement, then all momentum was lost with that infamous move to Cleveland for 1976-77. There's something weird about the city of Oakland not being able to hold on to their pro sports teams. Seals, Warriors, Raiders, and A's are all gone.
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Old 05-06-2026, 11:30 AM   #5
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I liked both the green and teal jerseys.
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